New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Michael B. de Leeuw | April 11, 2018
What does it actually mean these days to have “possession, custody or control” of a document or a few bytes of ESI? It is a critical question because discovery failures can lead to adverse inferences, sanctions and infamy!
By Ben Feuer, California Appellate Law Group | April 11, 2018
Even meritless appeals that require little opinion-writing time can take a year or more to be processed by the court. The delay is made worse by the court's seven judicial vacancies, with at least one more announced—nearly a quarter of the circuit's allotment.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Donna Doblick and Joshua Newborn | April 10, 2018
An inter-family squabble in the Virgin Islands has produced U.S. Supreme Court precedent that affects jurisdictional deadlines in thousands of cases across the country.
By Andrew Denney | April 10, 2018
For the third weekday in a row, public defenders Tuesday staged a walkout from a New York City courthouse to protest the presence of federal immigration authorities who came to arrest immigrants who showed up for court appearances.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | April 10, 2018
A split three-judge Pennsylvania Superior Court panel has vacated a $21 million insurance bad-faith judgment, finding the Pennsylvania judge who had awarded the money in a lengthy and scathing 2014 opinion improperly considered issues far outside the bounds of the case.
By Katheryn Tucker | April 10, 2018
Grant has served on the state high court for one year and three months. Gov. Nathan Deal appointed her to fill one of two expansion positions. She has written opinions for some of the most-watched cases.
By Jenna Greene | April 10, 2018
President Trump may have handpicked Geoffrey Berman to be U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, but the former Greenberg Traurig partner has upheld the independence and integrity of his office.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Joel I. Rachmiel | April 9, 2018
OP-ED: Mr. Bumble's humble opinion. A commentary on "State v. Sutherland."
By Michael Booth | April 9, 2018
The New Jersey Supreme Court is considering whether a medical malpractice plaintiff who took the rare step of seeking counsel fees under the offer-of-judgment rule, even after entering a high-low agreement that was silent on the issue, may recover such fees.
By Amanda Bronstad | April 9, 2018
In the runup to Mark Zuckerberg's Congressional testimony, Facebook's lawyers at Gibson Dunn claimed that the company "broke no laws and violated no legal duties" in a filing before the U.S. Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation.
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